[Mb-civic] Deadline for the Patriot Act - Russ Feingold,
John Sununu - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Nov 9 03:12:47 PST 2005
Deadline for the Patriot Act
By Russ Feingold and John Sununu | November 9, 2005
IN JULY, something unusual occurred in Washington: The US Senate cast a
unanimous vote on a controversial issue. Every member of the Senate
agreed to make meaningful changes to the Patriot Act as we reauthorized
parts of it scheduled to expire at the end of the year. These revisions
will ensure that our government can wage an effective fight against
terrorists that respects our basic freedoms. But the battle for these
reforms is not over. In the coming weeks, a House-Senate conference
committee will meet to work out the differences between competing
versions of the bill. Hard-won improvements to the Patriot Act could be
in jeopardy.
We will make every effort -- and, if we have to, use procedural options
at our disposal -- to oppose a final reauthorization bill that either
strips out the meaningful changes made by the Senate bill or adds
measures that ignore the public demands for more protection of our
rights and freedoms. Our goal is not to derail reauthorization; it is to
ensure that necessary changes to the Patriot Act are made as part of the
reauthorization bill. We can -- and should -- provide law enforcement
with the tools necessary to fight terrorism while protecting civil
liberties at home.
The end-of-the-year deadline for reauthorization gives us a rare chance
to fix parts of the Patriot Act -- creating a check on searches for
library, bookstore, and other sensitive records, putting new safeguards
on secret ''sneak and peek" searches of Americans' homes, and giving
citizens real power to challenge secret court orders. These and other
issues are at stake in the House-Senate conference committee's
deliberations.
If the Senate bill prevails in conference, Congress will finally catch
up with an American public that has been questioning the Patriot Act for
years -- librarians who are standing up to a Justice Department that
wants the power to dig into Americans' library records; town and city
councils -- even whole states -- that have passed resolutions opposing
parts of the Patriot Act; and business interests like the US Chamber of
Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, and the National
Association of Realtors that support changes to the law.
The Senate bill would make changes to some of the most controversial
provisions of the Patriot Act. The Senate bill would:
Require the government to convince a judge that a person is connected to
terrorism or espionage before secretly obtaining library, medical, and
other sensitive business records about that person, and allow recipients
of court orders for such records to challenge them in court.
Require the government in most circumstances to inform targets of
''sneak and peek" searches within seven days instead of being able to
delay that notification for an indefinite period as permitted by the
Patriot Act, or for up to six months as permitted by the House bill.
Eliminate ''John Doe roving wiretaps," the secret intelligence orders
that can now be issued without identifying either the person or phone to
be tapped.
Provide only a four-year extension for three of the most sensitive
provisions of the Patriot Act.
The House bill fails to include these important measures, leaving too
many of our freedoms at risk. While some improvements were incorporated
in the House bill, it is still a far cry from what Congress owes the
American people.
There is a strong sense among many Americans that in the Patriot Act the
government overreached when it sought power that is a potential threat
to law-abiding citizens. Congress should respond to these legitimate
concerns by sending the unanimously adopted Senate version of the
Patriot Act reauthorization bill to the president. We must reform the
Patriot Act, not rubber-stamp the original law. With these reforms, we
can fight terrorism without sacrificing our freedoms.
Russ Feingold, a Democratic US senator from Wisconsin. and John Sununu,
a Republican US senator from New Hampshire, are original cosponsors of
the legislation to modify the Patriot Act.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/11/09/deadline_for_the_patriot_act/
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